Improvement in clover-harvesters



P. DISMUKES. Gathering Clover Seed.

. No. 84,416. Patented Nov. 24, 1868.

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Letters Patent No. 84,416, dated November 24, 1868.

IMPROVEMENT IN CLOVER-HARVESTERS.

The Schedule referred to in these Letters Patent andmaking part of the lame.

To all whom it may concern Be it known that 1, PAUL DIsMUKEs, of Gallatin, in the county of Sumner, and State of Tennessee, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Machines for Gathering Glover and Grass-Seed; and I do hereby declare that the. following is a full, clear, and exact description thereof, reference being bad to the accompanying drawings, making part of this specification, and to the letters of reference marked thereon, like letters indicating like parts wherever. they occur.

To enable others skilled in the art. to construct and use my-invention, I will proceed to describe it.

This invention consists in a novel construction and arrangement of mechanism for gathering clover and other similar seeds.

In the drawing-- Figure 1 is a perspective view of my machine complete.

Figure 2, a vertical section through the finger-bar and revolving cutter.

The machine consists of a body, A, mounted upon the wheels B, and armed at its front side'with the stationary fingers or teeth. G; to hold the blades of clover or grass, which are carried against them by the reel E, and the heads out Oh by the revolving blades D, motion being imparted to the reel and cutter bybelts and pulleys connected with the wheels B, as herein- .nected by chains, 0, to the free side of the said bar 112,

the lever 9 being held in place by the rackt, secured to a standard on the rear end of the body A, all as shown in fig. 1..

The fingers G are so placed as to leave room for the entrance of the stems or blades of grass between them,

but 'not the heads, so that whenthe fingers are so adjusted as to run below the heads, they will ride upon the upper side of the fingers, while the stems pass up between, until the cutter D reaches them, when the heads are cut ed and thrown back up the platform, as shown in fig. 2. i

The cutter consists of a square shaft, D, having me Itallic blades, t, bolted to its two opposite sides, and having their edges projecting beyond the face of the shaft, as represented in fig. 2.

' The cutter-shaft D is. provided on one end with a pulley, b, driven by a belt from the pulley a, secured,

to the outer side of the driving-wheel B.

The reel E is driven by a belt from a pulley on the driving-wheel on the opposite side of the machine, as shown in fig. 1.

The cutter D is made adjustable, as shown in fig. 1, so as to out nearer to or further from the fingers.

The fingers C may be made separately, and bolted in place, or of a single piece of metabwith the slits or openings cut into its edge.

It is obvious that two or more sets of fingers, difiering inshape or size, may be fitted to one machine, so as to be'interchangeable for dificrent kinds of grass.

This machine is entirely automatic in its operation, after the teeth have been adjusted, is cheap, strong,

and simple, and answers perfectly the purpose for 

